Sunday, June 1, 2014

This Could Take a While (Volume and Trend Charts for Form I-129F)

By Victoria

Colin and I were doing some research on USCIS's website the other day and found an interesting area where you can look at charts regarding the intake volume and processing times of any USCIS field office in the U.S. It is, unfortunately, a little bit bleak in terms of how quickly ours might be processed...

To find the information regarding Form I-129F (which is what we submitted), you can go to http://dashboard.uscis.gov/ and enter the following information in the drop-down fields:
  1. Form Type: I-129F
  2. Office: Dallas Field Office
  3. Chart Type: Pick either one
Trend: The top trend chart shows values for USCIS nationally, and the bottom chart shows the Dallas office's trends for each month over the past year. The top chart is scary looking, but it's national, so that makes sense...Dallas has much more manageable numbers. But still, you'll notice the "pending" values are much higher than any of the other values. As I suspected, they definitely have a backlog to get through.

Volume: The volume chart shows only a couple of months ago (March 2014); the top one is national volume, and the bottom one is volume for just the Dallas office. Again, that national one is really intimidating. The second one has much more relevant information: the Dallas office had 12 total I-129F forms pending as of March, with only 1 making it all the way through to completion in March. If that's the rate of completion, it doesn't look like the completion time for ours will be coming up very soon...we're probably at least #15 in the queue, since we submitted in May.

Average Processing Time: The most definitive bit of disheartening information comes from our discovery of the average processing time for I-129F forms that go through Texas. To see this one, go to https://egov.uscis.gov/cris/Dashboard/CaseStatus.do and enter the following information in the drop-down fields:
  1. Form Type: I-129F
  2. Form Sub-Type: K-1/K-2
  3. Texas Service Center
You'll see that the average processing time for Texas Service Center is 5 months. Keep in mind, getting approved by the Dallas office is only STEP 1 of this whole process. After Texas, it still has to go through the National Visa Center in New Hampshire and then on to the U.S. Consulate in Belfast, Northern Ireland, which then has to set up interviews with Colin and process his additional documentation submissions.

So there's the bad news. If it does actually take 5 months for our application just to get through the Texas center, then it'll be a tight race to get Colin into the U.S. before the very end of the year. Let's just hope the processing time for us is somehow above average.

Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Arrived

By Victoria

Just a quick update -- USPS tracking confirms that our petition package arrived at the USCIS Dallas lockbox facility (fancy name for a P.O. Box) on Saturday morning (5/10)!

I don't think I will hear anything from USCIS to confirm receipt, so I'll have to wait until they actually review the contents and make a decision before I receive a notification.

By the way, I'm sure you've noticed that these blog posts have been written almost entirely by me so far...that will change once the visa application gets forwarded to the U.S. Consulate in Belfast, at which point all the hard work has to be done by Colin for his interview(s) and further evidence submission. You'll be hearing more from him on that side of the process once we get there.

UPDATE:
They actually did sent me a confirmation of receipt. Since I submitted form G-1145 for electronic notification, I got both a text message and an email saying that the Dallas center officially received our packet on May 15. I also received a letter of confirmation stating the same thing a few days later via snail mail. And here I thought the electronic notification option was meant to save paper...

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

PETITION SUBMITTED!

Our K-1 petition application is now officially in the mail!!


The application goes to a U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services lockbox facility in Dallas, Texas for processing. Once approved, it's sent to the National Visa Center, where it goes through another round of processing and approval. From there, the case is sent to the U.S. Consulate in Belfast, Northern Ireland; representatives there will contact Colin to continue the K-1 visa process.

Don't hold your breaths for this initial petition to be processed and approved too quickly, though...the Federal Government is not known for its speed. I'm hoping it wouldn't take more than a month to hear about the status of the case from Dallas, but honestly, who knows. Fingers crossed!

Sunday, May 4, 2014

Organizing the Petition Submission

By Victoria

There are a lot of components to this initial petition application, so I've had to consider how I was going to put it all together without it being a jumble of random papers. I want to make sure these documents are as easy to follow and check off the checklist for the Government reviewer(s) as possible. To show off my organizational prowess (and in case anyone reading this needs this information in the future...), I'll detail how I packaged the contents.

To start off, I decided to break it into three different packets. I went to Target and bought some clear report covers -- the kind that have a clip binding along the side so you can flip through the papers inside. I also bought a package of tab dividers for one of the packets, which I'll explain later. Since the Government probably doesn't care about the aesthetics THAT much, and because I'm never going to see these things again, I didn't invest much into my supplies: all told, I spent about $2-3 on the report covers and dividers.

The three packets are 1) Forms; 2) Supplementary Documents, and 3) Evidence of Meeting in Person.


Packet 1: Forms

There are four forms that must be submitted for the petition application:

  1. G-1145 (Electronic Notification of Acceptance of Application/Petition)
  2. I-129F (Petition for Alien Fiance)
  3. G-325A for the Petitioner (Biographical Form)
  4. G-325A for the Alien Fiance (Biographical Form) 
However, I moved the two G-325A forms to the second packet (which, again, I'll explain later). I-129F is the main/major form; the instructions for it specifically state that G-1145 should be clipped to the front of I-129F, so I clipped the two together inside the report binder.

Packet 2: Supplementary Documents

As stated on the cover, the documents I included in this packet are:

  1. Petitioner Proof of Citizenship (my birth certificate, front and back)
  2. Statements of Intent to Marry (one letter each from me and Colin)
  3. Petitioner G-325A with Passport Photo
  4. Fiance G-325A with Passport Photo
These are where my divider tabs come in. Because the supplementary documents are so varied and not necessarily similar in topic, I decided they needed a little more internal organization. I just divided this packet into three, based on the groupings of documents.

Tab 1 has my birth certificate to prove my U.S. citizenship. The instructions state that the front and back of the birth certificate must be included, so I made copies of both sides, even though there's nothing on the back of my certificate.

Tab 2 has two letters, one each signed by me and Colin, that state our intents to marry each other within 90 days of Colin's arrival in the U.S. on the K-1 Visa. They're basically the same letter, just with the ordering of the names and some pronouns altered. They're in business format, so we also have our names and addresses at the top of each letter.

Tab 3 has two copies of biographical form G-325A, one each for me and Colin. I originally intended for this section to just hold our passport-style photos (which is another requirement), but I couldn't figure out how to put the photos in there without them getting bent by the binding or just clipping them to a blank piece of paper to keep them from floating around. I did a little digging online and saw that others had attached their passport photos to the G-325A forms, which made so much more sense to me. Originally I had the G-325A forms in Packet 1 (Forms), but I still consider the passport photos to be supplementary documents and not quite right for the forms packet (they're listed in the instructions as a requirement unto themselves, not necessarily part of the G-325), so I moved the G-325A forms out of Packet 1 and into Packet 2 to stay with the photos. The forms are technically still supplementary, and since I have everything clearly listed on the front covers, I figure the bio forms will still be easy to find for the reviewers.

Packet 3: Evidence

I put the evidence of our relationship into a separate packet just because we have a lot more documentation for this requirement than all the other ones in Packet 2. The instructions give you quite a few options for presenting evidence of your relationship, so this is how I structured and presented ours:

  1. Opening formal statement of all dates on which we have met/visited each other, signed by me
  2. Internal cover pages for each meeting, followed by:
    1. Printed official flight itinerary for the visit
    2. One representative photo from the visit



We've met six times in the past two years, so that adds up to quite a few pages. (I blocked out some of the info in the example photos because that stuff doesn't need to be publicly available on the Internet.) I chose the photos based on how much identifiable background they contain, so it doesn't look like they could've been taken all at once or set up in a studio. The one pictured above is a bad example of this (whoops), but the others have as much setting in the background as I could find. The final evidence photo, from Colin's recent April visit, has the Jefferson Memorial in the background -- and that's about as identifiable as you can get.


So there you have it! The way I've organized all the papers might be overkill, but I'm so paranoid about this getting approved the first time that I want to make sure it's absolutely as clear and obvious as possible. No Government reviewer is going to open my submission, shuffle through a pile of papers, and claim they couldn't find one of the requirements!

Saturday, April 26, 2014

Strange Questions

Filling out official forms is generally a serious business, but there are just a couple questions on this Form I-129F that made me pause and think, "Wait, really?"

Part 2, 15.a.: He or she [the alien fiancé] last arrived as a: (visitor, student, exchange alien, crewman, stowaway, temporary worker, without inspection, etc.)

Er...would we tell you if he or she were a stowaway? Also, "without inspection" sounds like some kind of euphemism for illegal entry.

Part 2, 33.: Is your fiancé(e) related to you?

Yikes, I certainly hope not!

The rest is just your humdrum information about addresses, birth, family, etc.

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

A Slight Delay

By Victoria
 
Colin was scheduled to fly back to Northern Ireland tonight, but delays in the first leg of his flight made us decide that he would stay here in Virginia until tomorrow. His flights were supposed to be from DC to Newark, NJ and then from NJ to Belfast, Northern Ireland; the flight to Newark became delayed by about 2 hours, which meant Colin was going to miss his connecting flight to Belfast.

Rather than have him stranded overnight in Newark waiting for the next day's flight to Belfast, we decided he should stay here and just fly out of DC tomorrow (Thursday). The very helpful man at the United counter got Colin a flight set that would give him a 3-4 hour layover in Newark, just in case this happens again, which he seemed to think was likely. He told us that apparently the Newark airport currently only has one ramp for United flights, which frequently causes delays. (PS: Newark is horrible.)

Another slight delay is in regard to the paperwork: one of the forms we have to fill out for this initial petition application is a biographical form (one for each of us). The required information includes things like job history and housing history for the past 5 years, but Colin doesn't have access over here to his files and records to make sure he gets that information right. He's going to bring the form back to NI with him and fill it out, then send it back to me -- since I have to be the one to submit the full petition materials. Based on the time it takes mail to ship between UK and US, it'll probably only delay our petition submission by 1-2 weeks.

Otherwise, it's been a wonderful 3 weeks together. Here's a photo from our visit to the cherry blossoms in DC!


Saturday, April 5, 2014

Visitor

Guess who's here for a visit?


He's here until the 23rd!